Abstract

Molybdenum-based nanomaterials have shown promise for anticancer treatment due to their strong photothermal and redox-activated capabilities. Herein, we have fabricated cerium-doped MoOx (Ce-MoOv) with tunable Mo/Ce molar ratios by a one-pot method and investigated their effect on chemodynamic therapy (CDT) and photothermal therapy (PTT). It is found that Ce-MoOv can self-assemble into nanoclusters in acidic conditions and the increasing Ce amount will generate oxygen vacancy defects and induce the valence change of Mo6+/Mo5+ and Ce4+/Ce3+, which leads to strong near-infrared absorption with high photothermal conversion efficiency of 71.31 and 49.86% for 808 and 1064 nm. Other than photothermal conversion, the materials demonstrate pH-/glutathione (GSH)-activated photoacoustic (PA) imaging capability in vitro. In addition, Ce-MoOv acts as a CDT reagent capable of converting endogenous H2O2 to two types of reactive oxygen species (•OH, 1O2) while depleting GSH. Ce-MoOv demonstrates an excellent therapeutic effect against HCT116 cells and effectively reduces the intracellular GSH level and significantly increases the number of reactive radicals under 1064 nm laser irradiation as compared with the no-laser group in vitro. This work provides a new paradigm using lanthanide-doped polymetallic oxides for pH-/GSH-responsive photothermal/chemodynamic therapy with PA imaging ability.

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